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The Independent
6 minutes ago
- The Independent
Liverpool agree fee for new centre-back
Liverpool have agreed a £26m fee with Parma for Italian defender Giovanni Leoni. The 18-year-old centre-back is set to become their sixth major summer signing and take their spending in this window past £300m. Leoni will begin a medical on Merseyside on Thursday and will discuss personal terms, which are not expected to be a problem after he made it clear his preference was to join Liverpool. The Italy Under-19 international had also attracted interest from Internazionale as well as other Premier League clubs and will go straight into Liverpool's squad, with any talk of a loan move ruled out. He will join Liverpool after they stepped up their attempts to find a replacement for Jarell Quansah, who was sold to Bayer Leverkusen. The Premier League champions have also opened talks with Crystal Palace about England centre-back Marc Guehi. Their move for Leoni has no bearing on their interest in Guehi, with no sign so far they can agree a fee with Palace. Liverpool have had to use midfielders Ryan Gravenberch, Wataru Endo and Trey Nyoni and left-back Andy Robertson as centre-backs in pre-season after the sale of Quansah and when Joe Gomez was injured and Virgil van Dijk was ill. Head coach Arne Slot admitted after Sunday's Community Shield defeat to Palace that their defending was a concern, with nine goals conceded in their last four games. And their need for defensive reinforcements was also greater as Ibrahima Konate is in the last year of his contract. Now Leoni is set to join Florian Wirtz, Hugo Ekitike, Jeremie Frimpong, Milos Kerkez and Giorgi Mamardashvili, whose transfer from Valencia was arranged last year, among their summer signings.


The Independent
6 minutes ago
- The Independent
Tottenham ‘disgusted' by racial abuse aimed at Mathys Tel after Super Cup defeat
Tottenham have said they are 'disgusted' after forward Mathys Tel received racial abuse on social media after Wednesday night's UEFA Super Cup defeat to Paris St Germain. Tel missed a spot-kick in a penalty shoot-out, which Tottenham lost 4-3 after they had surrendered a late 2-0 lead to draw 2-2 after 90 minutes. The France Under-21s international, whose loan deal from Bayern Munich was made permanent in a £30million deal in June, was targeted with abuse after firing his effort wide. Tottenham said in a statement: 'We are disgusted at the racial abuse that Mathys Tel has received on social media following last night's UEFA Super Cup defeat. 'Mathys showed bravery and courage to step forward and take a penalty, yet those who abuse him are nothing but cowards – hiding behind anonymous usernames and profiles to spout their abhorrent views. 'We will work with the authorities and social media platforms to take the strongest possible action against any individual we are able to identify. We stand with you, Mathys.' Tottenham led 2-0 until the 85th minute at the Bluenergy Stadium in Udine, Italy, through goals from Micky van de Ven and Cristian Romero before late efforts from Lee Kang-in and Goncalo Ramos hauled PSG level.


The Guardian
7 minutes ago
- The Guardian
UK economy grew by 0.4% in June on stronger services and construction output
Update: Date: 2025-08-14T06:47:50.000Z Title: UK GDP grew by 0.3% in second quarter thanks to surprise June acceleration Content: Good morning, and welcome to our live, rolling coverage of business, economics and financial markets. The UK economy grew by 0.4% month-on-month in June according to new data that helped the second quarter to end with better-than-expected output, according to data published on Thursday. British output rose by 0.3% in the second quarter of 2025, the Office for National Statistics said. That was higher than the 0.1% expected by economists polled by Reuters. The faster-than-expected growth was down to better performance from the services and construction sectors, which grew at 0.4% and 1.2% respectively in the quarter – although production output (which includes manufacturing) fell. Real GDP per head is estimated to have grown by 0.2% in the latest quarter and is up 0.7% compared with the same quarter a year ago. Nevertheless, it was still a slowdown compared to the first quarter, when the UK economy grew by 0.7%. Economists expected slower growth because of Donald Trump's trade war, which caused chaos in the second quarter after his 'liberation day' announcement on 2 April. It is also unclear whether the help from the construction sector can be sustained, given more recent purchasing managers' index data for July showing a steep drop in UK housebuilding. We'll have all the reaction to the GDP figures this morning. 10am BST: Eurozone GDP growth rate second estimate (second quarter; previous: 0.6% quarter-on-quarter; consensus: 0.1%) 10am BST: Eurozone industrial production (June; previous: 1.7% month-on-month; consensus: -1%) 1pm BST: US producer price inflation (July; previous: 0%; consensus: 0.2%)